Evgeny Feldman (Евгений Фельдман) is a Russian photojournalist based in Moscow. He's currently freelancing, working for different independent outlets in Russia as well as major media from abroad, such as Svenska Dagbladet, CNN, Associated Press, Stern and others.

Born on February 24th, 1991, he graduated from psychology department of Moscow State University. In 2010 he started his job as a photographer at Novaya Gazeta newspaper and went on to work there until 2016. In 2014-2016 he was also a permanent photography contributor to Mashable.

Feldman covered protests in Moscow and country's regions, trials of the opposition leaders and activists, aftermaths of a flood in a city of Krymsk and of Charlie Hebdo terrorist attack in Paris as well as Pulse gay club shooting in Orlando. He also photographed Maidan revolution in Kiev, Crimea annexation and the war in Donbass. He covered US 2016 presidential primaries and elections. Now Feldman is covering Russian and European news, political and social stories.

In 2014 he released a photo book Apart on Ukrainian revolution & war that established a record in the history of Russian crowdfunding. All 1,500 copies was sold out in a few months. In 2015 renewed edition of Apart was published in Kiev, Ukraine. In 2015 he published two long-term photo projects, Moscow Military Glamour and The Village That Banned Wikipedia.

In 2017, he published his second album, Super Tuesday and The Other Days Of The Week that was photographed throughout the previous year in the US and intertwines America's daily life and the 2016 presidential elections. He also published an album Spartak, the Champions that tells a story of Moscow football team getting its first championship gold in 16 years.

Throughout 2017 and 2018 he is photographing Alexey Navalny's insurgent presidential campaign challenging Vladimir Putin. It is being published at navalny.feldman.photo and has already been seen by more than 1,5 million viewers.